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-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/CMakeLists.txt16
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/README.txt18
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.c71
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.proto9
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/Makefile17
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/README.txt60
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/client.c142
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.c40
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.h9
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.options13
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.proto20
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/server.c158
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/Makefile22
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/README.txt29
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.c71
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.proto9
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/Makefile24
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/README.txt25
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/decode_double.c33
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.c123
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.h26
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/doubleproto.proto15
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/encode_double.c25
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/test_conversions.c56
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/Makefile20
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/README.txt52
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/decode.c96
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/encode.c85
-rw-r--r--CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/unionproto.proto32
29 files changed, 0 insertions, 1316 deletions
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/CMakeLists.txt b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/CMakeLists.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index e5f33a0..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/CMakeLists.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
-cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8)
-project(NANOPB_CMAKE_SIMPLE C)
-
-set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/../../extra)
-find_package(Nanopb REQUIRED)
-include_directories(${NANOPB_INCLUDE_DIRS})
-
-nanopb_generate_cpp(PROTO_SRCS PROTO_HDRS simple.proto)
-include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
-#add_custom_target(generate_proto_sources DEPENDS ${PROTO_SRCS} ${PROTO_HDRS})
-set_source_files_properties(${PROTO_SRCS} ${PROTO_HDRS}
- PROPERTIES GENERATED TRUE)
-
-set(CMAKE_C_FLAGS "${CMAKE_C_FLAGS} -Wall -Werror -g -O0")
-
-add_executable(simple simple.c ${PROTO_SRCS} ${PROTO_HDRS})
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/README.txt b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/README.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index aa0f3f3..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/README.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
-Nanopb example "simple" using CMake
-=======================
-
-This example is the same as the simple nanopb example but built using CMake.
-
-Example usage
--------------
-
-On Linux, create a build directory and then call cmake:
-
- nanopb/examples/cmake_simple$ mkdir build
- nanopb/examples/cmake_simple$ cd build/
- nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/build$ cmake ..
- nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/build$ make
-
-After that, you can run it with the command: ./simple
-
-On other platforms supported by CMake, refer to CMake instructions.
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 1f6b137..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-#include "simple.pb.h"
-
-int main()
-{
- /* This is the buffer where we will store our message. */
- uint8_t buffer[128];
- size_t message_length;
- bool status;
-
- /* Encode our message */
- {
- /* Allocate space on the stack to store the message data.
- *
- * Nanopb generates simple struct definitions for all the messages.
- * - check out the contents of simple.pb.h!
- * It is a good idea to always initialize your structures
- * so that you do not have garbage data from RAM in there.
- */
- SimpleMessage message = SimpleMessage_init_zero;
-
- /* Create a stream that will write to our buffer. */
- pb_ostream_t stream = pb_ostream_from_buffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer));
-
- /* Fill in the lucky number */
- message.lucky_number = 13;
-
- /* Now we are ready to encode the message! */
- status = pb_encode(&stream, SimpleMessage_fields, &message);
- message_length = stream.bytes_written;
-
- /* Then just check for any errors.. */
- if (!status)
- {
- printf("Encoding failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&stream));
- return 1;
- }
- }
-
- /* Now we could transmit the message over network, store it in a file or
- * wrap it to a pigeon's leg.
- */
-
- /* But because we are lazy, we will just decode it immediately. */
-
- {
- /* Allocate space for the decoded message. */
- SimpleMessage message = SimpleMessage_init_zero;
-
- /* Create a stream that reads from the buffer. */
- pb_istream_t stream = pb_istream_from_buffer(buffer, message_length);
-
- /* Now we are ready to decode the message. */
- status = pb_decode(&stream, SimpleMessage_fields, &message);
-
- /* Check for errors... */
- if (!status)
- {
- printf("Decoding failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&stream));
- return 1;
- }
-
- /* Print the data contained in the message. */
- printf("Your lucky number was %d!\n", message.lucky_number);
- }
-
- return 0;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.proto b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.proto
deleted file mode 100644
index 5c73a3b..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/cmake_simple/simple.proto
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
-// A very simple protocol definition, consisting of only
-// one message.
-
-syntax = "proto2";
-
-message SimpleMessage {
- required int32 lucky_number = 1;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/Makefile b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/Makefile
deleted file mode 100644
index 2c7639a..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/Makefile
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
-# Include the nanopb provided Makefile rules
-include ../../extra/nanopb.mk
-
-# Compiler flags to enable all warnings & debug info
-CFLAGS = -ansi -Wall -Werror -g -O0
-CFLAGS += -I$(NANOPB_DIR)
-
-all: server client
-
-.SUFFIXES:
-
-clean:
- rm -f server client fileproto.pb.c fileproto.pb.h
-
-%: %.c common.c fileproto.pb.c
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ $^ $(NANOPB_CORE)
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/README.txt b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/README.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 7bdcbed..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/README.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,60 +0,0 @@
-Nanopb example "network_server"
-===============================
-
-This example demonstrates the use of nanopb to communicate over network
-connections. It consists of a server that sends file listings, and of
-a client that requests the file list from the server.
-
-Example usage
--------------
-
-user@host:~/nanopb/examples/network_server$ make # Build the example
-protoc -ofileproto.pb fileproto.proto
-python ../../generator/nanopb_generator.py fileproto.pb
-Writing to fileproto.pb.h and fileproto.pb.c
-cc -ansi -Wall -Werror -I .. -g -O0 -I../.. -o server server.c
- ../../pb_decode.c ../../pb_encode.c fileproto.pb.c common.c
-cc -ansi -Wall -Werror -I .. -g -O0 -I../.. -o client client.c
- ../../pb_decode.c ../../pb_encode.c fileproto.pb.c common.c
-
-user@host:~/nanopb/examples/network_server$ ./server & # Start the server on background
-[1] 24462
-
-petteri@oddish:~/nanopb/examples/network_server$ ./client /bin # Request the server to list /bin
-Got connection.
-Listing directory: /bin
-1327119 bzdiff
-1327126 bzless
-1327147 ps
-1327178 ntfsmove
-1327271 mv
-1327187 mount
-1327259 false
-1327266 tempfile
-1327285 zfgrep
-1327165 gzexe
-1327204 nc.openbsd
-1327260 uname
-
-
-Details of implementation
--------------------------
-fileproto.proto contains the portable Google Protocol Buffers protocol definition.
-It could be used as-is to implement a server or a client in any other language, for
-example Python or Java.
-
-fileproto.options contains the nanopb-specific options for the protocol file. This
-sets the amount of space allocated for file names when decoding messages.
-
-common.c/h contains functions that allow nanopb to read and write directly from
-network socket. This way there is no need to allocate a separate buffer to store
-the message.
-
-server.c contains the code to open a listening socket, to respond to clients and
-to list directory contents.
-
-client.c contains the code to connect to a server, to send a request and to print
-the response message.
-
-The code is implemented using the POSIX socket api, but it should be easy enough
-to port into any other socket api, such as lwip.
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/client.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/client.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 00f6dab..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/client.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,142 +0,0 @@
-/* This is a simple TCP client that connects to port 1234 and prints a list
- * of files in a given directory.
- *
- * It directly deserializes and serializes messages from network, minimizing
- * memory use.
- *
- * For flexibility, this example is implemented using posix api.
- * In a real embedded system you would typically use some other kind of
- * a communication and filesystem layer.
- */
-
-#include <sys/socket.h>
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <netinet/in.h>
-#include <unistd.h>
-#include <dirent.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <string.h>
-
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-
-#include "fileproto.pb.h"
-#include "common.h"
-
-/* This callback function will be called once for each filename received
- * from the server. The filenames will be printed out immediately, so that
- * no memory has to be allocated for them.
- */
-bool printfile_callback(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void **arg)
-{
- FileInfo fileinfo = {};
-
- if (!pb_decode(stream, FileInfo_fields, &fileinfo))
- return false;
-
- printf("%-10lld %s\n", (long long)fileinfo.inode, fileinfo.name);
-
- return true;
-}
-
-/* This function sends a request to socket 'fd' to list the files in
- * directory given in 'path'. The results received from server will
- * be printed to stdout.
- */
-bool listdir(int fd, char *path)
-{
- /* Construct and send the request to server */
- {
- ListFilesRequest request = {};
- pb_ostream_t output = pb_ostream_from_socket(fd);
- uint8_t zero = 0;
-
- /* In our protocol, path is optional. If it is not given,
- * the server will list the root directory. */
- if (path == NULL)
- {
- request.has_path = false;
- }
- else
- {
- request.has_path = true;
- if (strlen(path) + 1 > sizeof(request.path))
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Too long path.\n");
- return false;
- }
-
- strcpy(request.path, path);
- }
-
- /* Encode the request. It is written to the socket immediately
- * through our custom stream. */
- if (!pb_encode(&output, ListFilesRequest_fields, &request))
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Encoding failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&output));
- return false;
- }
-
- /* We signal the end of request with a 0 tag. */
- pb_write(&output, &zero, 1);
- }
-
- /* Read back the response from server */
- {
- ListFilesResponse response = {};
- pb_istream_t input = pb_istream_from_socket(fd);
-
- /* Give a pointer to our callback function, which will handle the
- * filenames as they arrive. */
- response.file.funcs.decode = &printfile_callback;
-
- if (!pb_decode(&input, ListFilesResponse_fields, &response))
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Decode failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&input));
- return false;
- }
-
- /* If the message from server decodes properly, but directory was
- * not found on server side, we get path_error == true. */
- if (response.path_error)
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Server reported error.\n");
- return false;
- }
- }
-
- return true;
-}
-
-int main(int argc, char **argv)
-{
- int sockfd;
- struct sockaddr_in servaddr;
- char *path = NULL;
-
- if (argc > 1)
- path = argv[1];
-
- sockfd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
-
- /* Connect to server running on localhost:1234 */
- memset(&servaddr, 0, sizeof(servaddr));
- servaddr.sin_family = AF_INET;
- servaddr.sin_addr.s_addr = htonl(INADDR_LOOPBACK);
- servaddr.sin_port = htons(1234);
-
- if (connect(sockfd, (struct sockaddr *)&servaddr, sizeof(servaddr)) != 0)
- {
- perror("connect");
- return 1;
- }
-
- /* Send the directory listing request */
- if (!listdir(sockfd, path))
- return 2;
-
- /* Close connection */
- close(sockfd);
-
- return 0;
-}
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 04a5aa8..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
-/* Simple binding of nanopb streams to TCP sockets.
- */
-
-#include <sys/socket.h>
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-
-#include "common.h"
-
-static bool write_callback(pb_ostream_t *stream, const uint8_t *buf, size_t count)
-{
- int fd = (intptr_t)stream->state;
- return send(fd, buf, count, 0) == count;
-}
-
-static bool read_callback(pb_istream_t *stream, uint8_t *buf, size_t count)
-{
- int fd = (intptr_t)stream->state;
- int result;
-
- result = recv(fd, buf, count, MSG_WAITALL);
-
- if (result == 0)
- stream->bytes_left = 0; /* EOF */
-
- return result == count;
-}
-
-pb_ostream_t pb_ostream_from_socket(int fd)
-{
- pb_ostream_t stream = {&write_callback, (void*)(intptr_t)fd, SIZE_MAX, 0};
- return stream;
-}
-
-pb_istream_t pb_istream_from_socket(int fd)
-{
- pb_istream_t stream = {&read_callback, (void*)(intptr_t)fd, SIZE_MAX};
- return stream;
-}
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.h b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.h
deleted file mode 100644
index 8dab3b7..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/common.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
-#ifndef _PB_EXAMPLE_COMMON_H_
-#define _PB_EXAMPLE_COMMON_H_
-
-#include <pb.h>
-
-pb_ostream_t pb_ostream_from_socket(int fd);
-pb_istream_t pb_istream_from_socket(int fd);
-
-#endif \ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.options b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.options
deleted file mode 100644
index 29a2ab0..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.options
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,13 +0,0 @@
-# This file defines the nanopb-specific options for the messages defined
-# in fileproto.proto.
-#
-# If you come from high-level programming background, the hardcoded
-# maximum lengths may disgust you. However, if your microcontroller only
-# has a few kB of ram to begin with, setting reasonable limits for
-# filenames is ok.
-#
-# On the other hand, using the callback interface, it is not necessary
-# to set a limit on the number of files in the response.
-
-ListFilesRequest.path max_size:128
-FileInfo.name max_size:128
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.proto b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.proto
deleted file mode 100644
index 5640b8d..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/fileproto.proto
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
-// This defines protocol for a simple server that lists files.
-//
-// See also the nanopb-specific options in fileproto.options.
-
-syntax = "proto2";
-
-message ListFilesRequest {
- optional string path = 1 [default = "/"];
-}
-
-message FileInfo {
- required uint64 inode = 1;
- required string name = 2;
-}
-
-message ListFilesResponse {
- optional bool path_error = 1 [default = false];
- repeated FileInfo file = 2;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/server.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/server.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 46a5f38..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/network_server/server.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,158 +0,0 @@
-/* This is a simple TCP server that listens on port 1234 and provides lists
- * of files to clients, using a protocol defined in file_server.proto.
- *
- * It directly deserializes and serializes messages from network, minimizing
- * memory use.
- *
- * For flexibility, this example is implemented using posix api.
- * In a real embedded system you would typically use some other kind of
- * a communication and filesystem layer.
- */
-
-#include <sys/socket.h>
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <netinet/in.h>
-#include <unistd.h>
-#include <dirent.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <string.h>
-
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-
-#include "fileproto.pb.h"
-#include "common.h"
-
-/* This callback function will be called once during the encoding.
- * It will write out any number of FileInfo entries, without consuming unnecessary memory.
- * This is accomplished by fetching the filenames one at a time and encoding them
- * immediately.
- */
-bool listdir_callback(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t *field, void * const *arg)
-{
- DIR *dir = (DIR*) *arg;
- struct dirent *file;
- FileInfo fileinfo = {};
-
- while ((file = readdir(dir)) != NULL)
- {
- fileinfo.inode = file->d_ino;
- strncpy(fileinfo.name, file->d_name, sizeof(fileinfo.name));
- fileinfo.name[sizeof(fileinfo.name) - 1] = '\0';
-
- /* This encodes the header for the field, based on the constant info
- * from pb_field_t. */
- if (!pb_encode_tag_for_field(stream, field))
- return false;
-
- /* This encodes the data for the field, based on our FileInfo structure. */
- if (!pb_encode_submessage(stream, FileInfo_fields, &fileinfo))
- return false;
- }
-
- return true;
-}
-
-/* Handle one arriving client connection.
- * Clients are expected to send a ListFilesRequest, terminated by a '0'.
- * Server will respond with a ListFilesResponse message.
- */
-void handle_connection(int connfd)
-{
- DIR *directory = NULL;
-
- /* Decode the message from the client and open the requested directory. */
- {
- ListFilesRequest request = {};
- pb_istream_t input = pb_istream_from_socket(connfd);
-
- if (!pb_decode(&input, ListFilesRequest_fields, &request))
- {
- printf("Decode failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&input));
- return;
- }
-
- directory = opendir(request.path);
- printf("Listing directory: %s\n", request.path);
- }
-
- /* List the files in the directory and transmit the response to client */
- {
- ListFilesResponse response = {};
- pb_ostream_t output = pb_ostream_from_socket(connfd);
-
- if (directory == NULL)
- {
- perror("opendir");
-
- /* Directory was not found, transmit error status */
- response.has_path_error = true;
- response.path_error = true;
- response.file.funcs.encode = NULL;
- }
- else
- {
- /* Directory was found, transmit filenames */
- response.has_path_error = false;
- response.file.funcs.encode = &listdir_callback;
- response.file.arg = directory;
- }
-
- if (!pb_encode(&output, ListFilesResponse_fields, &response))
- {
- printf("Encoding failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&output));
- }
- }
-
- if (directory != NULL)
- closedir(directory);
-}
-
-int main(int argc, char **argv)
-{
- int listenfd, connfd;
- struct sockaddr_in servaddr;
- int reuse = 1;
-
- /* Listen on localhost:1234 for TCP connections */
- listenfd = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
- setsockopt(listenfd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, &reuse, sizeof(reuse));
-
- memset(&servaddr, 0, sizeof(servaddr));
- servaddr.sin_family = AF_INET;
- servaddr.sin_addr.s_addr = htonl(INADDR_LOOPBACK);
- servaddr.sin_port = htons(1234);
- if (bind(listenfd, (struct sockaddr*)&servaddr, sizeof(servaddr)) != 0)
- {
- perror("bind");
- return 1;
- }
-
- if (listen(listenfd, 5) != 0)
- {
- perror("listen");
- return 1;
- }
-
- for(;;)
- {
- /* Wait for a client */
- connfd = accept(listenfd, NULL, NULL);
-
- if (connfd < 0)
- {
- perror("accept");
- return 1;
- }
-
- printf("Got connection.\n");
-
- handle_connection(connfd);
-
- printf("Closing connection.\n");
-
- close(connfd);
- }
-
- return 0;
-}
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/Makefile b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/Makefile
deleted file mode 100644
index 970a865..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/Makefile
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
-# Include the nanopb provided Makefile rules
-include ../../extra/nanopb.mk
-
-# Compiler flags to enable all warnings & debug info
-CFLAGS = -Wall -Werror -g -O0
-CFLAGS += -I$(NANOPB_DIR)
-
-# C source code files that are required
-CSRC = simple.c # The main program
-CSRC += simple.pb.c # The compiled protocol definition
-CSRC += $(NANOPB_DIR)/pb_encode.c # The nanopb encoder
-CSRC += $(NANOPB_DIR)/pb_decode.c # The nanopb decoder
-CSRC += $(NANOPB_DIR)/pb_common.c # The nanopb common parts
-
-# Build rule for the main program
-simple: $(CSRC)
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -osimple $(CSRC)
-
-# Build rule for the protocol
-simple.pb.c: simple.proto
- $(PROTOC) $(PROTOC_OPTS) --nanopb_out=. simple.proto
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/README.txt b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/README.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index ee77bfc..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/README.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
-Nanopb example "simple"
-=======================
-
-This example demonstrates the very basic use of nanopb. It encodes and
-decodes a simple message.
-
-The code uses four different API functions:
-
- * pb_ostream_from_buffer() to declare the output buffer that is to be used
- * pb_encode() to encode a message
- * pb_istream_from_buffer() to declare the input buffer that is to be used
- * pb_decode() to decode a message
-
-Example usage
--------------
-
-On Linux, simply type "make" to build the example. After that, you can
-run it with the command: ./simple
-
-On other platforms, you first have to compile the protocol definition using
-the following command::
-
- ../../generator-bin/protoc --nanopb_out=. simple.proto
-
-After that, add the following four files to your project and compile:
-
- simple.c simple.pb.c pb_encode.c pb_decode.c
-
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 1f6b137..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,71 +0,0 @@
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-#include "simple.pb.h"
-
-int main()
-{
- /* This is the buffer where we will store our message. */
- uint8_t buffer[128];
- size_t message_length;
- bool status;
-
- /* Encode our message */
- {
- /* Allocate space on the stack to store the message data.
- *
- * Nanopb generates simple struct definitions for all the messages.
- * - check out the contents of simple.pb.h!
- * It is a good idea to always initialize your structures
- * so that you do not have garbage data from RAM in there.
- */
- SimpleMessage message = SimpleMessage_init_zero;
-
- /* Create a stream that will write to our buffer. */
- pb_ostream_t stream = pb_ostream_from_buffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer));
-
- /* Fill in the lucky number */
- message.lucky_number = 13;
-
- /* Now we are ready to encode the message! */
- status = pb_encode(&stream, SimpleMessage_fields, &message);
- message_length = stream.bytes_written;
-
- /* Then just check for any errors.. */
- if (!status)
- {
- printf("Encoding failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&stream));
- return 1;
- }
- }
-
- /* Now we could transmit the message over network, store it in a file or
- * wrap it to a pigeon's leg.
- */
-
- /* But because we are lazy, we will just decode it immediately. */
-
- {
- /* Allocate space for the decoded message. */
- SimpleMessage message = SimpleMessage_init_zero;
-
- /* Create a stream that reads from the buffer. */
- pb_istream_t stream = pb_istream_from_buffer(buffer, message_length);
-
- /* Now we are ready to decode the message. */
- status = pb_decode(&stream, SimpleMessage_fields, &message);
-
- /* Check for errors... */
- if (!status)
- {
- printf("Decoding failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&stream));
- return 1;
- }
-
- /* Print the data contained in the message. */
- printf("Your lucky number was %d!\n", message.lucky_number);
- }
-
- return 0;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.proto b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.proto
deleted file mode 100644
index 5c73a3b..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/simple/simple.proto
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
-// A very simple protocol definition, consisting of only
-// one message.
-
-syntax = "proto2";
-
-message SimpleMessage {
- required int32 lucky_number = 1;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/Makefile b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/Makefile
deleted file mode 100644
index 874a64b..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/Makefile
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,24 +0,0 @@
-# Include the nanopb provided Makefile rules
-include ../../extra/nanopb.mk
-
-# Compiler flags to enable all warnings & debug info
-CFLAGS = -Wall -Werror -g -O0
-CFLAGS += -I$(NANOPB_DIR)
-
-all: run_tests
-
-.SUFFIXES:
-
-clean:
- rm -f test_conversions encode_double decode_double doubleproto.pb.c doubleproto.pb.h
-
-test_conversions: test_conversions.c double_conversion.c
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ $^
-
-%: %.c double_conversion.c doubleproto.pb.c
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ $^ $(NANOPB_CORE)
-
-run_tests: test_conversions encode_double decode_double
- ./test_conversions
- ./encode_double | ./decode_double
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/README.txt b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/README.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index d9fcdfc..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/README.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
-Nanopb example "using_double_on_avr"
-====================================
-
-Some processors/compilers, such as AVR-GCC, do not support the double
-datatype. Instead, they have sizeof(double) == 4. Because protocol
-binary format uses the double encoding directly, this causes trouble
-if the protocol in .proto requires double fields.
-
-This directory contains a solution to this problem. It uses uint64_t
-to store the raw wire values, because its size is correct on all
-platforms. The file double_conversion.c provides functions that
-convert these values to/from floats, without relying on compiler
-support.
-
-To use this method, you need to make some modifications to your code:
-
-1) Change all 'double' fields into 'fixed64' in the .proto.
-
-2) Whenever writing to a 'double' field, use float_to_double().
-
-3) Whenever reading a 'double' field, use double_to_float().
-
-The conversion routines are as accurate as the float datatype can
-be. Furthermore, they should handle all special values (NaN, inf, denormalized
-numbers) correctly. There are testcases in test_conversions.c.
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/decode_double.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/decode_double.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 5802eca..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/decode_double.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
-/* Decodes a double value into a float variable.
- * Used to read double values with AVR code, which doesn't support double directly.
- */
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-#include "double_conversion.h"
-#include "doubleproto.pb.h"
-
-int main()
-{
- uint8_t buffer[32];
- size_t count = fread(buffer, 1, sizeof(buffer), stdin);
- pb_istream_t stream = pb_istream_from_buffer(buffer, count);
-
- AVRDoubleMessage message;
- pb_decode(&stream, AVRDoubleMessage_fields, &message);
-
- float v1 = double_to_float(message.field1);
- float v2 = double_to_float(message.field2);
-
- printf("Values: %f %f\n", v1, v2);
-
- if (v1 == 1234.5678f &&
- v2 == 0.00001f)
- {
- return 0;
- }
- else
- {
- return 1;
- }
-}
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.c
deleted file mode 100644
index cf79b9a..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,123 +0,0 @@
-/* Conversion routines for platforms that do not support 'double' directly. */
-
-#include "double_conversion.h"
-#include <math.h>
-
-typedef union {
- float f;
- uint32_t i;
-} conversion_t;
-
-/* Note: IEE 754 standard specifies float formats as follows:
- * Single precision: sign, 8-bit exp, 23-bit frac.
- * Double precision: sign, 11-bit exp, 52-bit frac.
- */
-
-uint64_t float_to_double(float value)
-{
- conversion_t in;
- in.f = value;
- uint8_t sign;
- int16_t exponent;
- uint64_t mantissa;
-
- /* Decompose input value */
- sign = (in.i >> 31) & 1;
- exponent = ((in.i >> 23) & 0xFF) - 127;
- mantissa = in.i & 0x7FFFFF;
-
- if (exponent == 128)
- {
- /* Special value (NaN etc.) */
- exponent = 1024;
- }
- else if (exponent == -127)
- {
- if (!mantissa)
- {
- /* Zero */
- exponent = -1023;
- }
- else
- {
- /* Denormalized */
- mantissa <<= 1;
- while (!(mantissa & 0x800000))
- {
- mantissa <<= 1;
- exponent--;
- }
- mantissa &= 0x7FFFFF;
- }
- }
-
- /* Combine fields */
- mantissa <<= 29;
- mantissa |= (uint64_t)(exponent + 1023) << 52;
- mantissa |= (uint64_t)sign << 63;
-
- return mantissa;
-}
-
-float double_to_float(uint64_t value)
-{
- uint8_t sign;
- int16_t exponent;
- uint32_t mantissa;
- conversion_t out;
-
- /* Decompose input value */
- sign = (value >> 63) & 1;
- exponent = ((value >> 52) & 0x7FF) - 1023;
- mantissa = (value >> 28) & 0xFFFFFF; /* Highest 24 bits */
-
- /* Figure if value is in range representable by floats. */
- if (exponent == 1024)
- {
- /* Special value */
- exponent = 128;
- }
- else if (exponent > 127)
- {
- /* Too large */
- if (sign)
- return -INFINITY;
- else
- return INFINITY;
- }
- else if (exponent < -150)
- {
- /* Too small */
- if (sign)
- return -0.0f;
- else
- return 0.0f;
- }
- else if (exponent < -126)
- {
- /* Denormalized */
- mantissa |= 0x1000000;
- mantissa >>= (-126 - exponent);
- exponent = -127;
- }
-
- /* Round off mantissa */
- mantissa = (mantissa + 1) >> 1;
-
- /* Check if mantissa went over 2.0 */
- if (mantissa & 0x800000)
- {
- exponent += 1;
- mantissa &= 0x7FFFFF;
- mantissa >>= 1;
- }
-
- /* Combine fields */
- out.i = mantissa;
- out.i |= (uint32_t)(exponent + 127) << 23;
- out.i |= (uint32_t)sign << 31;
-
- return out.f;
-}
-
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.h b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.h
deleted file mode 100644
index 62b6a8a..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/double_conversion.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
-/* AVR-GCC does not have real double datatype. Instead its double
- * is equal to float, i.e. 32 bit value. If you need to communicate
- * with other systems that use double in their .proto files, you
- * need to do some conversion.
- *
- * These functions use bitwise operations to mangle floats into doubles
- * and then store them in uint64_t datatype.
- */
-
-#ifndef DOUBLE_CONVERSION
-#define DOUBLE_CONVERSION
-
-#include <stdint.h>
-
-/* Convert native 4-byte float into a 8-byte double. */
-extern uint64_t float_to_double(float value);
-
-/* Convert 8-byte double into native 4-byte float.
- * Values are rounded to nearest, 0.5 away from zero.
- * Overflowing values are converted to Inf or -Inf.
- */
-extern float double_to_float(uint64_t value);
-
-
-#endif
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/doubleproto.proto b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/doubleproto.proto
deleted file mode 100644
index 72d3f9c..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/doubleproto.proto
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,15 +0,0 @@
-// A message containing doubles, as used by other applications.
-syntax = "proto2";
-
-message DoubleMessage {
- required double field1 = 1;
- required double field2 = 2;
-}
-
-// A message containing doubles, but redefined using uint64_t.
-// For use in AVR code.
-message AVRDoubleMessage {
- required fixed64 field1 = 1;
- required fixed64 field2 = 2;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/encode_double.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/encode_double.c
deleted file mode 100644
index cd532d4..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/encode_double.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
-/* Encodes a float value into a double on the wire.
- * Used to emit doubles from AVR code, which doesn't support double directly.
- */
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include "double_conversion.h"
-#include "doubleproto.pb.h"
-
-int main()
-{
- AVRDoubleMessage message = {
- float_to_double(1234.5678f),
- float_to_double(0.00001f)
- };
-
- uint8_t buffer[32];
- pb_ostream_t stream = pb_ostream_from_buffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer));
-
- pb_encode(&stream, AVRDoubleMessage_fields, &message);
- fwrite(buffer, 1, stream.bytes_written, stdout);
-
- return 0;
-}
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/test_conversions.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/test_conversions.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 22620a6..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_double_on_avr/test_conversions.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,56 +0,0 @@
-#include "double_conversion.h"
-#include <math.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-
-static const double testvalues[] = {
- 0.0, -0.0, 0.1, -0.1,
- M_PI, -M_PI, 123456.789, -123456.789,
- INFINITY, -INFINITY, NAN, INFINITY - INFINITY,
- 1e38, -1e38, 1e39, -1e39,
- 1e-38, -1e-38, 1e-39, -1e-39,
- 3.14159e-37,-3.14159e-37, 3.14159e-43, -3.14159e-43,
- 1e-60, -1e-60, 1e-45, -1e-45,
- 0.99999999999999, -0.99999999999999, 127.999999999999, -127.999999999999
-};
-
-#define TESTVALUES_COUNT (sizeof(testvalues)/sizeof(testvalues[0]))
-
-int main()
-{
- int status = 0;
- int i;
- for (i = 0; i < TESTVALUES_COUNT; i++)
- {
- double orig = testvalues[i];
- float expected_float = (float)orig;
- double expected_double = (double)expected_float;
-
- float got_float = double_to_float(*(uint64_t*)&orig);
- uint64_t got_double = float_to_double(got_float);
-
- uint32_t e1 = *(uint32_t*)&expected_float;
- uint32_t g1 = *(uint32_t*)&got_float;
- uint64_t e2 = *(uint64_t*)&expected_double;
- uint64_t g2 = got_double;
-
- if (g1 != e1)
- {
- printf("%3d double_to_float fail: %08x != %08x\n", i, g1, e1);
- status = 1;
- }
-
- if (g2 != e2)
- {
- printf("%3d float_to_double fail: %016llx != %016llx\n", i,
- (unsigned long long)g2,
- (unsigned long long)e2);
- status = 1;
- }
- }
-
- return status;
-}
-
-
-
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/Makefile b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/Makefile
deleted file mode 100644
index 66396a0..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/Makefile
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
-# Include the nanopb provided Makefile rules
-include ../../extra/nanopb.mk
-
-# Compiler flags to enable all warnings & debug info
-CFLAGS = -ansi -Wall -Werror -g -O0
-CFLAGS += -I$(NANOPB_DIR)
-
-all: encode decode
- ./encode 1 | ./decode
- ./encode 2 | ./decode
- ./encode 3 | ./decode
-
-.SUFFIXES:
-
-clean:
- rm -f encode unionproto.pb.h unionproto.pb.c
-
-%: %.c unionproto.pb.c
- $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ $^ $(NANOPB_CORE)
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/README.txt b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/README.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 7a1e75d..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/README.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,52 +0,0 @@
-Nanopb example "using_union_messages"
-=====================================
-
-Union messages is a common technique in Google Protocol Buffers used to
-represent a group of messages, only one of which is passed at a time.
-It is described in Google's documentation:
-https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/techniques#union
-
-This directory contains an example on how to encode and decode union messages
-with minimal memory usage. Usually, nanopb would allocate space to store
-all of the possible messages at the same time, even though at most one of
-them will be used at a time.
-
-By using some of the lower level nanopb APIs, we can manually generate the
-top level message, so that we only need to allocate the one submessage that
-we actually want. Similarly when decoding, we can manually read the tag of
-the top level message, and only then allocate the memory for the submessage
-after we already know its type.
-
-
-Example usage
--------------
-
-Type `make` to run the example. It will build it and run commands like
-following:
-
-./encode 1 | ./decode
-Got MsgType1: 42
-./encode 2 | ./decode
-Got MsgType2: true
-./encode 3 | ./decode
-Got MsgType3: 3 1415
-
-This simply demonstrates that the "decode" program has correctly identified
-the type of the received message, and managed to decode it.
-
-
-Details of implementation
--------------------------
-
-unionproto.proto contains the protocol used in the example. It consists of
-three messages: MsgType1, MsgType2 and MsgType3, which are collected together
-into UnionMessage.
-
-encode.c takes one command line argument, which should be a number 1-3. It
-then fills in and encodes the corresponding message, and writes it to stdout.
-
-decode.c reads a UnionMessage from stdin. Then it calls the function
-decode_unionmessage_type() to determine the type of the message. After that,
-the corresponding message is decoded and the contents of it printed to the
-screen.
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/decode.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/decode.c
deleted file mode 100644
index b9f4af5..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/decode.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,96 +0,0 @@
-/* This program reads a message from stdin, detects its type and decodes it.
- */
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <string.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-
-#include <pb_decode.h>
-#include "unionproto.pb.h"
-
-/* This function reads manually the first tag from the stream and finds the
- * corresponding message type. It doesn't yet decode the actual message.
- *
- * Returns a pointer to the MsgType_fields array, as an identifier for the
- * message type. Returns null if the tag is of unknown type or an error occurs.
- */
-const pb_field_t* decode_unionmessage_type(pb_istream_t *stream)
-{
- pb_wire_type_t wire_type;
- uint32_t tag;
- bool eof;
-
- while (pb_decode_tag(stream, &wire_type, &tag, &eof))
- {
- if (wire_type == PB_WT_STRING)
- {
- const pb_field_t *field;
- for (field = UnionMessage_fields; field->tag != 0; field++)
- {
- if (field->tag == tag && (field->type & PB_LTYPE_SUBMESSAGE))
- {
- /* Found our field. */
- return field->ptr;
- }
- }
- }
-
- /* Wasn't our field.. */
- pb_skip_field(stream, wire_type);
- }
-
- return NULL;
-}
-
-bool decode_unionmessage_contents(pb_istream_t *stream, const pb_field_t fields[], void *dest_struct)
-{
- pb_istream_t substream;
- bool status;
- if (!pb_make_string_substream(stream, &substream))
- return false;
-
- status = pb_decode(&substream, fields, dest_struct);
- pb_close_string_substream(stream, &substream);
- return status;
-}
-
-int main()
-{
- /* Read the data into buffer */
- uint8_t buffer[512];
- size_t count = fread(buffer, 1, sizeof(buffer), stdin);
- pb_istream_t stream = pb_istream_from_buffer(buffer, count);
-
- const pb_field_t *type = decode_unionmessage_type(&stream);
- bool status = false;
-
- if (type == MsgType1_fields)
- {
- MsgType1 msg = {};
- status = decode_unionmessage_contents(&stream, MsgType1_fields, &msg);
- printf("Got MsgType1: %d\n", msg.value);
- }
- else if (type == MsgType2_fields)
- {
- MsgType2 msg = {};
- status = decode_unionmessage_contents(&stream, MsgType2_fields, &msg);
- printf("Got MsgType2: %s\n", msg.value ? "true" : "false");
- }
- else if (type == MsgType3_fields)
- {
- MsgType3 msg = {};
- status = decode_unionmessage_contents(&stream, MsgType3_fields, &msg);
- printf("Got MsgType3: %d %d\n", msg.value1, msg.value2);
- }
-
- if (!status)
- {
- printf("Decode failed: %s\n", PB_GET_ERROR(&stream));
- return 1;
- }
-
- return 0;
-}
-
-
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/encode.c b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/encode.c
deleted file mode 100644
index e124bf9..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/encode.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,85 +0,0 @@
-/* This program takes a command line argument and encodes a message in
- * one of MsgType1, MsgType2 or MsgType3.
- */
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <string.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-
-#include <pb_encode.h>
-#include "unionproto.pb.h"
-
-/* This function is the core of the union encoding process. It handles
- * the top-level pb_field_t array manually, in order to encode a correct
- * field tag before the message. The pointer to MsgType_fields array is
- * used as an unique identifier for the message type.
- */
-bool encode_unionmessage(pb_ostream_t *stream, const pb_field_t messagetype[], const void *message)
-{
- const pb_field_t *field;
- for (field = UnionMessage_fields; field->tag != 0; field++)
- {
- if (field->ptr == messagetype)
- {
- /* This is our field, encode the message using it. */
- if (!pb_encode_tag_for_field(stream, field))
- return false;
-
- return pb_encode_submessage(stream, messagetype, message);
- }
- }
-
- /* Didn't find the field for messagetype */
- return false;
-}
-
-int main(int argc, char **argv)
-{
- if (argc != 2)
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s (1|2|3)\n", argv[0]);
- return 1;
- }
-
- uint8_t buffer[512];
- pb_ostream_t stream = pb_ostream_from_buffer(buffer, sizeof(buffer));
-
- bool status = false;
- int msgtype = atoi(argv[1]);
- if (msgtype == 1)
- {
- /* Send message of type 1 */
- MsgType1 msg = {42};
- status = encode_unionmessage(&stream, MsgType1_fields, &msg);
- }
- else if (msgtype == 2)
- {
- /* Send message of type 2 */
- MsgType2 msg = {true};
- status = encode_unionmessage(&stream, MsgType2_fields, &msg);
- }
- else if (msgtype == 3)
- {
- /* Send message of type 3 */
- MsgType3 msg = {3, 1415};
- status = encode_unionmessage(&stream, MsgType3_fields, &msg);
- }
- else
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Unknown message type: %d\n", msgtype);
- return 2;
- }
-
- if (!status)
- {
- fprintf(stderr, "Encoding failed!\n");
- return 3;
- }
- else
- {
- fwrite(buffer, 1, stream.bytes_written, stdout);
- return 0; /* Success */
- }
-}
-
-
diff --git a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/unionproto.proto b/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/unionproto.proto
deleted file mode 100644
index 209df0d..0000000
--- a/CAN-binder/libs/nanopb/examples/using_union_messages/unionproto.proto
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
-// This is an example of how to handle 'union' style messages
-// with nanopb, without allocating memory for all the message types.
-//
-// There is no official type in Protocol Buffers for describing unions,
-// but they are commonly implemented by filling out exactly one of
-// several optional fields.
-
-syntax = "proto2";
-
-message MsgType1
-{
- required int32 value = 1;
-}
-
-message MsgType2
-{
- required bool value = 1;
-}
-
-message MsgType3
-{
- required int32 value1 = 1;
- required int32 value2 = 2;
-}
-
-message UnionMessage
-{
- optional MsgType1 msg1 = 1;
- optional MsgType2 msg2 = 2;
- optional MsgType3 msg3 = 3;
-}
-